Business Standard

TikTok needs free speech arguments to overcome Trump's broad powers to ban

TikTok says that just because its parent, ByteDance Ltd., is based in Beijing, that doesn't exclude the app from being fully protected by the Constitution just like any American company

Donald Trump, TikTok,
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TikTok says the president harbors ill-will toward the app after users pranked his campaign rally in Tulsa, Oklahoma, by mass-ordering tickets and not showing up.

Edvard Pettersson | Bloomberg
TikTok Inc. sued President Donald Trump to overturn his Aug. 6 executive order that in effect will ban the Chinese-owned social media app in the U.S. next month. TikTok said in its lawsuit that the order was motivated by election-year politics and that Trump exceeded his authority because there’s no real national emergency justifying the order.

“Now is the time for us to act,” TikTok said in a statement announcing the Aug. 24 complaint in Los Angeles federal court. “We simply have no choice.”

How quickly will the lawsuit play out?

The Justice Department may make the first move by asking for dismissal

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